(Submitted for Mary B.)
Several weeks ago I said that I would send the two of you names of books I have recently read, books that I would like to discuss with others.
It all started with:
1. Ferguson, N. (2002) Empire: The Rise and Demise of the British World Order and the Lessons for Global Power. New York: Basic Books. Some of Ferguson's articles in The New York Times motivated me to read this book. I also wanted to consolidate what I knew about the British colonies. I finished the book while flying to Zurich on Labor Day, 2005, and groaned audibly with disappointment as I closed the book. The man sitting next to me heard that groan, questioned me, and then suggested I read other books by the same title. (It turned out he was a Princeton professor.) Even though I disagreed with his thesis, Ferguson does a fine job with the histories of various colonies.
2. Hardt, M. and Negri, A. (2000). Empire. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. These authors distinguish between the British colonialism and today's empire that draws upon the U.S. Constitution and ideas related to hybrid identities and expanding frontiers.
3. _________. (2004). Multitude: War and Democracy in the Age of Empire. New York: Penguin Books. The authors pick up where the first book left off and argue that the US and its allies so control the world that the needs and interests of the multitudes cannot be heard in political arenas. Thus, they are not heard; their concerns are not dealt with. That's why multitudes take over the commons at times: the WTO meetings; the torchings in France, etc.
4. Pitts, J. (2005). A Turn to Empire: The Rise of Imperial Liberalism in Britain and France. Princeton: Princeton University Press. Pitts traces philosophic thought from Adam Smith, Edmund Berke, Jeremy Bentham, James Mills, John Stuart Mills, and Tocqueville in regard to colonialism and shows how the thinking dramatically changed. James Mills, John Stuart Mills, and Tocqueville trivialized natives living in places like India, China, the West Indies, and Algeria and came to believe that the despotism found in British and France colonialism was necessary to establish a European government and civilization in such places.
5. Mehta, U. S. (1999). Liberalism and Empire: A Study in Nineteenth-Century British Liberal Thought. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. Mehta argues that the imposition of European rational thought, utilitarianism, and the liberalism of the colonial period resulted in despotism. These thought patterns, assumed to be universal, were unable to accommodate the strange and the unfamiliar. He believes phenomenological and hermeneutic approaches should have been taken.
6. Weaver, M.A. (2000). A Portrait of Egypt: A Journey Through the World of Militant Islam.New York: Farrar, Straus, and Giroux. Mubarak and the blind Sheikh Omar Abdel-Rahman, now imprisoned in solitary confinement for life in NYC, were born only miles apart in one of the poorest parts of Egypt. One became Egypt's political leader; the other, disturbed about deep, unending poverty, became a sheikh, developing his own militaristic philosophy of how to change the world and teaching his ideas to Osama bin Laden, leaders in Somalia, and elsewhere. This book provides an excellent background to help explain what is going on in the world today.
My cousin, who lives in Cairo and works for the Department of Antiquities there, sent me this book just before I went to Egypt. It was, indeed, an eye-opener, leading me to ask many questions and to go many places beyond where the tour went.
The above books provide an understanding or a set of different lenses through which to view what is going on in today's world.
Wednesday, October 25, 2006
Thursday, October 19, 2006
The Ethical Society Without Walls
Here's a link to the newly created Ethical Society Without Walls. According to an article about the site published in this month's Dialogue, the site was developed as a way of providing Ethical Culture community to people not associated with an Ethical Culture Society. It's a neat site containing discussion forums, platform addresses, resources for social action and ways for members to connect with each other. Check out the site, and if you know of anyone who might be interested in Ethical Culture, but doesn't live close to an Ethical Society, invite them to visit the site.
Wednesday, October 18, 2006
Our tv ad is posted to You Tube and Google Video
Here’s our commercial –-- Does anyone know why static got tagged on the end? Same with the Google Video, but not on the file I uploaded. Please let me know if you have any ideas.
Monday, October 16, 2006
We've got company..
...in the blogosphere. The Brooklyn Society for Ethical Culture now has an unofficial blog which you can visit here.
It would be terrific if we could find a way to use these blogs (and the internet, in general) to forge stronger connections and dialogues between ethical societies and other fellow humanists.
It would be terrific if we could find a way to use these blogs (and the internet, in general) to forge stronger connections and dialogues between ethical societies and other fellow humanists.
Wednesday, October 11, 2006
An Important Event
On Sunday, October 15, 2006 is a very special event at the Bergen County Ethical Culture Society at 687 Larch Avenue in Teaneck. From 11 AM - 12:15 PM, there will be a panel discussion about the humanitarian aspect of the bone marrow transplant. Dr. Richard Bernstein will moderate the panel, consisting of member and donor Scott Harris; the young recipient and his parents; and representatives of Holy Name and Hackensack Hospitals. This promises to be an important and informative platform; all are welcome.
After the panel discussion, everyone will be invited to join the National Bone Marrow Registry. All that is required is a swab of cheek cells for tissue typing.
Every day, thousands of cancer patients are searching for a bone marrow donor. When you join the National Bone Marrow Registry, you join more than 6 million people who stand ready to give someone a future. Even with a Registry of millions, some patients are unable to find a suitable match. You could be the one a patient needs. You'll never know unless you join.
You could save a life. Take the first step to give someone hope.
After the panel discussion, everyone will be invited to join the National Bone Marrow Registry. All that is required is a swab of cheek cells for tissue typing.
Every day, thousands of cancer patients are searching for a bone marrow donor. When you join the National Bone Marrow Registry, you join more than 6 million people who stand ready to give someone a future. Even with a Registry of millions, some patients are unable to find a suitable match. You could be the one a patient needs. You'll never know unless you join.
You could save a life. Take the first step to give someone hope.
Tuesday, October 03, 2006
Joe Chuman Speaks Out
Our leader, Dr. Joe Chuman, has a recently published letter in the NY Times Book Review and an editorial piece in the Bergen Record.
Thanks, Joe.
Thanks, Joe.
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